Physicists Chip Away at Anti-matter Imbalance
by PhysOrg staff
Why there is stuff in the universe—more properly, why there is an imbalance between matter and antimatter—is one of the long-standing mysteries of cosmology. A team of researchers working at the National Institute of Standards and Technology has just concluded a 10-year-long study of the fate of neutrons in an attempt to resolve the question, the most sensitive such measurement ever made. The universe, they concede, has managed to keep its secret for the time being, but they’ve succeeded in significantly narrowing the number of possible answers.
Though the word itself evokes science fiction, antimatter is an ordinary—if highly uncommon—material that cosmologists believe  once made up almost exactly half of the substance of the universe. When  particles and their antiparticles come into contact, they instantly  annihilate one another in a flash of light. Billions of years ago, most  of the matter and all of the antimatter vanished in this fashion,  leaving behind a tiny bit of matter awash in cosmic energy. What we see  around us today, from stars to rocks to living things, is made up of  that excess matter, which survived because a bit more of it existed…
(read more: PhysOrg)   (image: emiT team)

Physicists Chip Away at Anti-matter Imbalance

by PhysOrg staff

Why there is stuff in the universe—more properly, why there is an imbalance between matter and antimatter—is one of the long-standing mysteries of cosmology. A team of researchers working at the National Institute of Standards and Technology has just concluded a 10-year-long study of the fate of neutrons in an attempt to resolve the question, the most sensitive such measurement ever made. The universe, they concede, has managed to keep its secret for the time being, but they’ve succeeded in significantly narrowing the number of possible answers.

Though the word itself evokes science fiction, antimatter is an ordinary—if highly uncommon—material that cosmologists believe once made up almost exactly half of the substance of the universe. When particles and their antiparticles come into contact, they instantly annihilate one another in a flash of light. Billions of years ago, most of the matter and all of the antimatter vanished in this fashion, leaving behind a tiny bit of matter awash in cosmic energy. What we see around us today, from stars to rocks to living things, is made up of that excess matter, which survived because a bit more of it existed…

(read more: PhysOrg)   (image: emiT team)

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    Physicists Chip Away at Anti-matter Imbalance by PhysOrg staff Why there is stuff in the universe—more properly, why...
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